For a variety of career goals, UNB Fredericton’s psychology graduate program can help you get there.
Our clinical program is accredited by The Canadian Psychological Association and adheres to a scientist-practitioner. We offer generalist training to equip students with the skills needed to work across the lifespan with children, adolescents, and adults. Our in-house training clinic (the Psychological Wellness Centre) enables students to begin practicing their newly developing clinical skills in their first year of the program. Research skill are honed through the completion of apprenticeships and dissertation. Research opportunities are available in diverse methodologies and in both basic and applied topics.
Our psychology program prepares students for careers in a wide variety of scientific, academic, and applied settings, and follow an apprenticeship model where students are exposed to individualized research, teaching, and applied experiences, in collaboration with their supervisor, other faculty members, and community partners. We collaborate with our Saint John campus to provide access to a wide range of psychological research opportunities and courses.
Veronica Whitford: Developmental Cognitive Psychology/Neuroscience, Psycholinguistics
All students are considered for an Arts Faculty or departmental Graduate Assistantship (part scholarship, part teaching assistantship); Assistantships are awarded on a competitive basis (typically, year 1 about $17,000, years 2-5 at about $21,000). Students are also nominated for other internal award competitions. Students are expected to apply for external funding and have been very successful in these competitions. Currently, we have graduate students with funding from SSHRC (Master’s, Doctoral, and CGS), NSERC (Master's and CGS), and CIHR (Master’s), and Vanier (Doctoral).
For more information on our program, contact Dr. Biljana Stevanovski, Director of Graduate Studies, or Janet Noiles, Graduate Studies Assistant.
Keirstead Hall, Rm. 119
506-453-4707
Related: Graduate Program in Psychology